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Authors: Melissa Mayhue

Tags: #Historical Paranormal Romance, #Historical Romance, #Love Story, #Paranormal, #Romance

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BOOK: Warrior Untamed
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Relief jolted through Brie’s chest as she stared down the path. At last they’d found someone, even though it wasn’t her brother’s party, as she’d hoped. She leaned forward in her saddle, straining to see who approached them. “Is that . . . ?”

“It’s the Tinklers,” Halldor answered flatly, sounding resigned.

Even better, to her way of thinking. She understood that many people looked down on the Tinklers and considered them little better than thieves and whores, but she’d assumed Halldor was more open-minded and less judgmental than that. It bothered her more than she would have expected to realize that she might have been so mistaken about his character.

The Tinklers had been good to her. And they seemed to know more about the oddities of her world than anyone she’d ever met. So in spite of Halldor’s bad attitude, if anyone would be able to help him, Brie had not one doubt that it would be Editha Faas.

“Hurry,” she ordered, urging her mount to a trot to more quickly close the distance between them.

“Welcome back to us!” William Faas called, drawing his wagon to a stop only seconds before his wife, Editha, hopped to the ground.

The Tinkler ran past Brie as if she didn’t exist.

“Come down from there and show me what’s happened to you,” she ordered as she stopped beside Halldor’s horse.

Brie turned to study her companion more closely. Had something in the way he carried himself on the horse given away his distress? There was nothing she could see, but in all honesty she didn’t really care how the woman knew Halldor had been injured. She cared only about curing what ailed him.

“It’s only a small wound,” she offered as Halldor climbed down off his horse. “But it’s gone to infection wickedly fast.”

Halldor dropped the fur he wore at his feet and kneeled in front of the Tinkler woman so that she could examine the wound for herself.

Editha’s expression spoke of things Brie suspected she didn’t want to hear.


Wicked
is an apt description,” Editha murmured, poking at the wound while Halldor gritted his teeth. “I’ve seen its like only once before, and I know yer circumstances are not the same. What manner of thing has done this to you?”

When Halldor didn’t answer quickly enough, Brie spoke up. “The weapon is called the Sword of
the Ancients. But it passes my understanding how it could affect him so badly, since its blade barely grazed his skin.”

A tiny scratch of a cut. A wound that should have all but healed itself by now.

Editha looked up, a momentary flash of surprise on her face before she masked the emotion. “Is this true?” she asked Halldor. “The Sword of the Ancients?”

He nodded, his gaze fixed upon the Tinkler’s.

“How is it possible for the sword to have . . .” Editha’s voice trailed off as both she and Halldor continued to stare at one another. “I see. I should have known. How, then, is it that yer still alive?”

“You should have known what?” Brie asked. “What’s going on here?”

Both of them ignored her.

“I suspect it has to do with the jewels I carry.”

Brie moved closer in an effort to hear the conversation, her patience wearing thin with the quiet back-and-forth. The Tinkler needed to do something for Halldor and she needed to do it quickly.

“Can you no help him, Editha? Surely you have a poultice or a salve to heal a wound such as this.”

The Tinklers were known far and wide for the herbs and tinctures they supplied to which no others had access. It couldn’t be possible that they didn’t have something to help Halldor. Brie simply wouldn’t accept that.

“It is an ancient
seid,
a very old dark magic, that
afflicts our warrior friend. Its power is too strong by far for my healing skills.” Editha slowly shook her head. “The best I can hope to do is to delay the inevitable. He needs a far more powerful healer than I. One born to the talent. And he needs her soon, by the looks of the wound.”

“There is one who might help him at MacQuarrie Keep.” William spoke from behind Brie, having approached silently.

“No.” Editha responded with finality. “He canna go there for help. She’s no yet ready for such a step. Besides, her destiny is already written. I think only Orabilis can help him now.”

At last, they were saying something Brie understood. “The witch of Rowan Cottage? Should I take him there?”

“No!” Halldor shook his head like a wounded bull about to charge. “Bridget cannot be allowed anywhere near Tordenet again. You know it’s a death sentence for her if she falls into Torquil’s hands.”

For once, Brie agreed with Halldor. Anywhere near Tordenet was the last place she’d choose to go until she had recovered the sword. Then she’d be ready to take her revenge on the monster who had murdered her father. Unfortunately, it sounded as if the choice was not hers to make.

“Torquil and his intent for me are of little importance. If that’s the only place to seek healing for O’Donar, then that’s where we’ll go.”

“No,” Halldor said again, attempting to rise to his feet, but Editha held him where he was with one delicate hand to his wounded shoulder.

“In that case, I’ll do what I can to help him get there. Bring me water and bandages,” the Tinkler ordered, and her husband hurried back toward their wagon. “And you, Halldor O’Donar, I’d have those jewels of which you spoke.”

“Wait!” Brie could hardly believe her ears. According to Halldor, the jewels were as necessary to their quest as the sword itself. He’d told her the jewels must be reunited with the sword to rein in its power. Giving them to the Tinklers was out of the question. “There must be some other payment you’d accept.”

“Bah! Dinna you be so foolish, lassie.” Editha’s eyebrows knit together into a straight, dark, disapproving line. “I’ve no desire for payment. I need the gems to bind the evil within his wound.”

“Oh.”

Brie’s face flamed with her embarrassment as she silently berated herself for sinking to all the closed-minded judgment she’d heaped at Halldor’s feet such a short time ago. She was every bit as bad as he was. Worse, in fact, because she’d convinced herself that she had no prejudices, and yet, at the very first opportunity, she had jumped to the wrong conclusion about the people who had risked so much to help her when she needed their help.

More proof, as if she required it, that her father had been right. Her lack of patience and hasty judgment made
her
her own worst enemy.

“Bridget!”

Brie’s head snapped up, her attention refocused on the scene before her.

“I need you out here with us, lass, no drawn deep inside yer own thoughts. Listen to me well. Should the bandage need redressing before you reach Rowan Cottage, there’ll be none but you to do it, aye? You must pay attention to the proper way.”

Brie nodded and sank to her knees next to the Tinkler. Though why the woman seemed to think dressing a wound was so complicated was beyond her understanding. A bandage was a bandage.

“Watch carefully,” Editha instructed, pointing to the ground in front of her, where a long strip of folded linen lay with the jewels tucked in between the layers of the cloth.

“You’ll line the stones up, just so,” she said, working through the linen to straighten the stones next to one another like little soldiers standing at attention. “You’ll want to make sure you dinna touch them with yer bare hands. You must ensure that the five of them are kept close together at all times with the linen drawn over them. To do otherwise could give Fenrir a clear view of everything around the jewels.”

“Fenrir?”

“The Beast that inhabits Torquil’s body. An ancient being of immense evil.”

A shudder crawled down Brie’s spine and she drew back a little, uncomfortable with her nearness to the stones. She’d known they were powerful, but she’d had no idea just how powerful they actually were. Neither had she understood how direct their connection to the Beast could be.

“You’ll want to make sure the center stone is directly over the wound,” Editha continued. “Come. Watch.”

As Brie leaned in close, she could feel the heat rolling off Halldor’s fevered skin. The wound had puckered, the skin red and heated. Small gray bubbles formed along the line of the opening, tumbling out over one another like ants escaping a hill, battling for their release from the confines of his skin.

Editha laid the cloth over the wound and Halldor sucked air into his lungs as if he fought off some great pain.

Unable to stop herself, Brie reached for his hand, holding on as his grip tightened around her fingers.

“And you tie it, just so. You see? Twice around and tie it again. You can do this, yes? Yes.” Editha answered her own question, nodding to herself as she rose to her feet and brushed her hands off on the long folds of her brightly colored skirt.

Halldor squeezed Brie’s hand and then released his hold, pushing himself up to stand and offering a hand to assist Brie. Already the normal skin tone had returned to his face and he seemed steadier on his feet.

“Excellent work, my lady Tinkler.” He bowed his
head respectfully before turning to catch up his horse’s reins. “I feel well enough to return to our hunt for—”

“Three days at most,” Editha cut in. “Time to reach Rowan Cottage if you hurry, but nothing more.”

“Reclaiming the sword is more important than what might happen to me.”

“No!” Brie’s cry overshadowed the Tinkler’s.

“You are wrong, Halldor O’Donar.” Editha pointed a finger in his direction, her voice taking on a musical quality Brie hadn’t heard before. “You must live. Perhaps you forget that you are indebted to me—and not even death frees you from a debt owed the Fae.”

The Fae?
Brie had no time to consider Editha’s startling revelation or Halldor’s apparent lack of surprise at the Tinkler’s words.

He ran his free hand down over his mouth and chin as if he’d forgotten his beard was no longer there. “Even if I go along as you say, the protections set at Rowan Cottage will prevent my entry. We both know that.”

“Bridget will gain your entry,” Editha responded. “Trust in her.”

The Tinkler was correct—Halldor should trust her. By the Seven, nothing would keep her from getting him the help he needed. Not Torquil, not this creature Fenrir, and certainly not the big, stubborn warrior standing beside her.

T
welve

T
HE DIFFERENCE IN
how his shoulder felt since the Tinkler had bandaged him was amazing. Hall could still feel the evil seething just under the skin, but not as pronounced as it had been before. His strength had returned, though he accepted this to be a temporary state of well-being. The evil would win out as the Tinkler had warned, of that he had no doubt.

None of Asgard’s bloodline could hope to survive an encounter with the business end of the Sword of the Ancients.

He would do his best to reach Rowan Cottage as Editha Faas had instructed. Considering his debt to her, his honor demanded it. But knowing as he now did that Orabilis was not a witch but a powerful Faerie healer, he had little hope of making it through her defenses to obtain her help. No matter what Bridget said, if Orabilis had designed those defenses to keep out the descendents of Asgard, there was no way he was getting past.

A sideward glance brought Bridget’s profile into
view. She rode tall in her saddle, back straight, eyes focused into the distance. A whole range of adjectives flooded his mind every time he looked at the woman.

Strong. Determined. Proud. Beautiful.

A ridiculous thought, that last one. Her beauty was of no matter to him. Even if he weren’t doomed by his encounter with the Sword of the Ancients, no woman in the whole of this world would be interested in tying her fate to a man like him. A
being
like him. He was bound in service to an ancient god, his whole life at the mercy of Thor’s every whim.

Bridget brushed a stray curl from her face and a spear of regret stabbed through Hall’s heart.

Funny, how traveling the world in defense of Mortals who called on Thor for help had never rankled before. Maybe it was only his own mortality that made it feel like such a burden now.

“What?” she asked, turning to catch him staring at her.

“Nothing.” She arched an eyebrow and he was forced to come up with a better response. “Fine, then. I was only wondering how much longer you might last before we have to stop for the night.”

“How much longer
I
might last?” She snorted her derision. “My stamina is hardly in question, now, is it? Yer the one with the patched-up arm. Better I should be asking
you
how much longer
you
might last.”

Prickly-spirited, as always. It was one of the adjectives he’d somehow left off his earlier list,
along with
impatient
and
annoying.
The woman had a temper that made him grind his teeth.

She would be one of the things he’d truly miss when he left this world.

“You think that’s funny, do you?” she asked, her brows drawing into a frown as she glared at him. “I fail to see anything the least bit amusing about our situation. It’s no bad enough that we’ve two days of hard travel ahead of us, into territory where neither of us is welcome. Now yer sitting there with that silly grin upon yer face. And look at this, would you . . . it’s starting to rain! On top of everything else. Fine reward that is, and me trying for nothing more than to see you safe.” She wiped a hand over her face and pulled up the hood of her cloak with one last annoyed look in his direction.

As if the rain were his fault.

Hall stared into the solid gray wall of precipitation moving toward them, knowing that, in fact, the rain
was
his fault. He’d allowed his emotions to run wild, doing nothing to cloak them. Nothing to prevent the all-too-obvious result of his depression.

He’d never realized that masking the way he felt required so much energy. Energy he simply didn’t have to spare right now. But mask it he must.

With an effort on his part that stole from him his ability to do anything else, the pounding rain slowed to a light, annoying mist. By the time they reached a spot where he felt they could camp for the night, the rains had completely stopped.

BOOK: Warrior Untamed
12.79Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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